(Free) DIY Photobooth Props using PicMonkey and Silhouette

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

I posted a little sneak peek of my photo booth props on the Silhouete School Facebook page last week and was immediately asked where the design could be purchased. Guess what peeps - it's FREE courtesy of PicMonkey!

Have you caught on by now? I love me some PicMonkey. If you aren't familiar with the monkey swing on over and check out the most fabulous and FREE photo editor and designer on the web. I'm not even joking. PicMonkey has tons of free designs and since you can save them in JPEG format that means they can be converted to free Silhouette designs, as well. (More on importing JPEG and GIFs to Silhouette Studio in a minute.)

Today, I'm going to share a fun tutorial on making DIY photobooth props. Photo booth props often include mustaches, beards, hats, glasses, tiaras, lips, thought bubbles and the list goes on depending on the theme of the party, wedding, or celebration (or perhaps you're just making them for your kiddos for no reason other than you're a rock-star mom)! Guess what...PicMonkey is totally at rock star status, too! Let's get started.

On the left side click the butterfly icon (in teal in the screen grab below) to open up the overlay designs.

Scroll down to the 'People Toppers' category where you'll find tons of photobooth-worthy designs.

(Be sure to peek in the other categories, too, to see if anything strikes your fancy.)

NOTE:
Many of PicMonkey's designs are free...but there are some that have a
little gold crown next to them. That indicates that the design is part
of the paid Royale package. I love PicMonkey so much and use it so
often (hello every.single.day) that paying the $33 for the year for access to all the awesome designs and fonts was a no-brainer. *** THIS WEEK ONLY GET A FREE TRIAL OF ROYALE***
But I digress...

Double click the design(s) you like to add them to your work area. Resize and arrange them in your PicMonkey work area. They don't have to be neat or anything, but give yourself some room between each design. To keep things simple for this tutorial, I'm going to work with just a few - the mustache, beard and glasses.

Now save your design by clicking 'Save' in the gray toolbar at the top. Name the file and make sure it saves as .jpeg. I try to save on my desktop so it's easy to find.

Open up Silhouette Studio and at the same time navigate to the folder
where your PicMonkey design saved. Click the name of the file and drag
it into Silhouette Studio. For more help on importing a JPEG into Silhouette Studio click here. It's going to come in looking enormous so use the corner squares to make it small enough to fit in your Studio work area.

Click the 'Open the Trace Window' icon (circled) at the top.

Then click 'Select Trace Area'.

Now usually I would trace all of my designs at the same time - but these are all slightly different so I traced them all separately. The mustache and the beard are pretty straight forward.

Mustache (solid design with only one cut line): Draw box around design > Uncheck High Pass Filter (this avoids that double cut line you often get) > Trace Outer Edge.

Beard (solid colored design, but more than one cut line) : Draw box around design > Uncheck High Pass Filter > Trace (so the mouth opening is also traced and now just the outter edge of the beard)

Glasses (Multiple Cut Lines and Complicated Design): The glasses have a lot of reflections on them so you end up with a lot of cut lines, as seen below, if you do just 'trace' which you don't want.

You only want to cut the lenses and the glasses. There are several ways to go about this, but the way I'm going to show you is the fastest and easiest in my opinion. We're actually going to do two traces and then combine the cut lines.

Now, move the JPG out of the way and delete it. Your trace will look something like this.

To get just the lenses you need to select the entire glasses cut design > ungroup and/or Release Compound Path. Then you'll be able to select only the lenses. Move them, at the same time, into the first sunglass trace you did.

I promise you it took me 30x longer to type all that out than it did to actually make those traces.

At this point, you can arrange your designs and adjust the sizing in preparation to cut.

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